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1994-05-02
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<text>
<title>
Why It's Still The Old World Order
</title>
<article>
<hdr>
Foreign Service Journal, July 1991
Why It's Still The Old World Order
</hdr>
<body>
<p>By Janice Gross Stein. Janice Gross Stein is a professor of
political science at the University of Toronto and a fellow of
the Royal Society of Canada. She recently edited (Getting to the
Table: Processes of International Prenegotiation).
</p>
<p> Every war generates lessons and spawns myths. Even though it
is still early, several myths already have been created in the
euphoria of victory in the Gulf War, and preliminary lessons
can be drawn about the management of international conflict.
The myths are misleading and the lessons cautionary.
</p>
<p> Two lessons emerge from the period that preceded the war:
deterrence and compulsion both failed. A strategy of deterrence
uses threats to prevent an adversary from taking an unwanted
action--"don't do that or else." Compulsion involves using
the threat of force to convince an adversary to do something he
does not wish to do. Both strategies assume as a minimum
condition sufficient military superiority to make the threat
credible. Despite its unquestioned military advantage, the
United States practiced a flawed strategy of deterrence in the
two weeks preceding Iraq's invasion of Kuwait on August 2. From
the invasion until the onset of war on January 16, the
American-led coalition vigorously attempted to compel Iraq to
withdraw from Kuwait. Neither strategy of conflict management
succeeded. Why?
</p>
<p>Confused messages
</p>
<p> In the weeks immediately preceding Iraq's invasion of
Kuwait, Washington sent ambiguous messages about its likely
response to a use of force by Saddam Hussein. At the now
infamous July 25 meeting in Baghdad, Ambassador April Glaspie
told Hussein that "...we have no opinion on the Arab-Arab
conflicts, like your border disagreement with Kuwait." Glaspie
subsequently testified before the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee that, during that meeting, she had also warned several
times that "we would insist on settlements being made in a
nonviolent manner, not by threats, not by intimidation, and
certainly not by aggression...I told him orally we would defend
our vital interests, we would support our friends in the Gulf,
we would defend their sovereignty and integrity."
</p>
<p> At worst, in the critical two weeks when Saddam was
considering the use of force, the United States sent a weak and
confused message about its likely response, should Iraq use
force. At best, to the extent that Washington did try to deter,
the warning was not credible. The president of Iraq doubted not
the capability but the resolve of the United States to defend
Kuwait. American resolve was in question not because of inept
strategy by the American ambassador, but because of confused
policy. In the last several years, the United States had
courted Iraq as a counterweight to Iran and turned a blind eye
to evidence that Hussein might be considering aggression against
his neighbors. Under these conditions, it was difficult for the
United States, irrespective of its military capability, to make
its threats credible.
</p>
<p> The second lesson is unambiguous. Compulsion did not work.
Despite the best efforts of the Bush Administration to
manipulate the risk of war and its unquestioned military
superiority, Saddam Hussein did not back down. This time,
signals were clear, unequivocal and overwhelming, but the
strategy still failed. Several factors explain the failure to
avoid war.
</p>
<p> Saddam continued to doubt American resolve, not on the basis
of U.S. military capability but rather on the basis of its
willingness to suffer casualties. In discussing the battle of
Fao, which had been decisive in the Iran-Iraq war, Saddam told
Ambassador Glaspie that, "Yours is a society which cannot
accept 10,000 dead in one battle." Drawing an analogy to the
withdrawal of American Marines from Beirut, President Hussein
was persuaded that the American public would not tolerate large
numbers of casualties in a ground war.
</p>
<p> More to the point, Saddam's calculation of the costs and
benefits was different from that of the United States. One
probable interpretation of his refusal to retreat is that he
could not accept the political costs; after the first week,
once he was condemned by fellow Arab leaders at the summit in
Cairo, the loss of pride and honor and the humiliation of
backing down were intolerable. Saddam preferred to fight and
lose than to pay the personal and political price that retreat
involved.
</p>
<p> The success of threat-based strategies of conflict
management depends not only on superior military capabilities,
but on an understanding of the other side's decision criteria.
George Bush and Saddam Hussein could not cross the cultural
divide to understand the basis of the other's calculation. In
the Gulf, threat-based strategies failed to prevent both crisis
and war. These are cautionary lessons for the future management
of international conflict.
</p>
<p>Smart weapons and talking heads
</p>
<p> The war, fought from January 16 to February 27, spawned
other lessons on the management of international conflict in
the post-Cold War era. Two stand out in importance. First,
smart weapons, especially used from the air, greatly reduced
the political costs of conventional warfare. "Smart" weapons
thus make it easier for great powers to fight conventional wars
against middle and smaller powers in the Third World. Analysts
suggest that international cooperation may grow as the cost of
military technology escalates. If "smart" weapons are easily
available over the next decade, they may undercut peaceful
settlements of a myriad of disputes in the Third World and make
some kinds of north-south wars more likely.
</p>
<p> Second, the political constraints operating on President
Bush during the war, as distinct from the prewar period, were
overestimated. Although the war was high tech, its coverage was
not. Management of the media and control of information were
carefully planned by the Pentagon before the fighting began.
Due to what leaders thought they had learned from Vietnam, this
was the first radio war in two generations, in which home TV
coverage was largely restricted to "talking heads." In part
because the public saw very few visual images of death and
damage in the fighting, and because the war was brief, President
Bush conducted the war virtually free of political constraints.
This lesson has been well learned by military leaders in
Washington as well as other Western capitals. Electronic wars
and radio coverage make war more, rather than less, likely as
a future instrument of international conflict management.
</p>
<p>New world order?
</p>
<p> In the post-war period, several dangerous myths have already
been accepted. The first and most important is that the
orchestration and management of the war confirm "American
hegemony" or the emergence of a "unipolar system" dominated by
the United States. Some critics allege that the United States,
working under the guise of collective security to preserve a
hegemonic order, went to war to secure strategic resources in
the Gulf and to protect its client regimes. Others insist that
the most striking feature of the post-Cold War world is its
unipolarity, with the United States unchallenged at the center
of world power. The first group sees continuation, the second
fundamental change in the system, but both agree on the
preeminence of the United States in the post-Cold War
international system.
</p>
<p> This analysis of a unipolar hegemonic order as demonstrated
by the performance of the United States in the war in the Gulf
mistakes the shell for the substance. The war occurred under
very specific conditions that are not likely to be replicated.
President Saddam Hussein was widely feared and hated in his own
country and beyond his borders in the Middle East. Although his
political agenda received wide support in the Arab world, he